A couple walk into a restaurant and order a flatbread and a $1,400 bottle of Château
Haut-Brion. That’s not the start of a joke—those guests were among the first at Decanter,
the newly opened restaurant in the St. Regis Hotel.

“Fine dining as we knew it is dead,” says restaurant directorKerem Kendigelen. “People want to be more casual.”

When celebrity chefAlain Ducasse announced in May that he was pulling out of Adour—Decanter’s
high-end predecessor that occupied the space for five years—the remaining team rethought
the concept. Like Elisir,
which morphed into the more relaxed (and subsequently busier)Osteria Elisir earlier this year, Decanter is more of a facelift operation than a full-on makeover.
Changes aren’t absolute: you’ll find the exact same elegant-chic dining room, a focus
on wine (the list boasts 2,700 bottles), and executive chefSébastien Rondier, who worked with Ducasse for more than a decade. Besides the name, the shift is most
evident in gentler pricing and à-la-carte dishes that draw from the Mediterranean instead of pricey prix-fixe menus and heavier
French influences.

(Above) Sashimi-style hamachi is one of the few dishes carried over from Adour, here dressed with niçoise-style accoutrements such as pistou, quail eggs, and summer vegetables. (Below) A flatbread conjures Turkish flavors with hummus, braised lamb shank, sweet tagine jam, and tangy goat cheese. Photographs by Jeff Elkins.

Rondier, a native of Saint-Jean-de-Luz in the Basque region of France, isn’t turning
away from his Francophile roots, but is instead expanding the restaurant’s reach to
nearby Mediterranean countries, namely Italy and Turkey. Instead of cheesygougères, guests are greeted with rosemary focaccia and pools of extra-virgin olive oil, while
Adour’smacaron finale has been switched for complimentary mini cupcakes—equally dainty but perhaps
more personal—in flavors such as dark chocolate spiced with espelette pepper. Splurges
($30-plus entrées) are still an option; dishes like the New York strip with shishito
peppers and a sustainable catch of the day for two that arrives with braised fennel
and ajus enriched with lobster. It’s equally easy to go casual, especially at lunch, with
dishes such as the aforementioned flatbread layered with hummus, Humboldt Fog goat
cheese, tagine jam, and hunks of braised lamb shank. There’s also a burger, albeit
one we’ve never seen before: a calamari patty fashioned from fresh-ground squid, capers,
and herbs, served with piquillo peppers on olive oil brioche; traditionalists can
opt for the cheeseburger on the lunch menu.

Splurge on a whole rockfish cooked for two with braised Meyer lemon and fennel and a lobster-enriched sauce. Photograph by Jeff Elkins.

A separate family-style menu has been a growing trend in trendy New York City restaurants—think
special-order fried chicken at Momofuku Noodle Bar or the “whole hog” at Daniel Boulud’s
DBGB—and you can opt for a similar option here. Grab eight or more friends for the
“family table,”
where for $55 a person you’ll gather in a private room adjacent to the kitchen and
feast on a spread of shared appetizers, entrées such as roast chicken with summer
vegetable gratin, sides, cheeses, and desserts. Just don’t forget to split the tab
for that $1,400 bottle of wine.

Anna Spiegel covers the dining and drinking scene in her native DC. Prior to joining Washingtonian in 2010, she attended the French Culinary Institute and Columbia University’s MFA program in New York, and held various cooking and writing positions in NYC and in St. John, US Virgin Islands.